Changing the Days of Holy Week
How did the Lord’s resurrection on “the third day” ever become the “second day”, as Christians almost universally imagine in today’s world?
Because the Stick of Joseph, Covenant of Christ, and the Book of Mormon confirm the New Testament account of His rising on the third day. (see 3 Nephi 4:3,5,10 CE and Mosiah 1:14 CE)
The answer to the riddle lies in the Gentile (Christian, LDS, etc.) misunderstanding of what a sabbath is, and that there were two sabbaths that week. It is very well covered here: To The Remnant: First Fruits (take a minute to read it, if you haven't before)
A “sabbath” is a day of rest, literally translated as a “cessation”. As Adrian points out, it’s important to understand that there were three different types of “sabbaths” observed anciently:
• The weekly sabbath, observed as a “cessation” from work on the seventh day of the week.
• The monthly sabbath, observed at the beginning of a new month or, in other words, at a new moon.
• The holy days each year, including the first day of Pesach/Passover on 15 Nisan.
So, yes, it should be "Good Thursday" not "Good Friday". That is, 14 Nisan began after sunset Wednesday with the Last Supper, continuing with the suffering in Gethsemane later that night, and finishing with the trial & crucifixion on Thursday before sunset.
And beginning with what we call "sundown on Thursday", 15 Nisan, or the first day of Passover, was a sabbath. And Saturday, 16 Nisan, was the weekly sabbath. Two sabbath days in a row.
I highly recommend the Gospel & Messiah Harmonies on Scriptures.info, which correctly includes all of these in its timeline. It also aligns & references the newly revealed Testimony of St. John in the harmonies, which scripture came in 2017 in fulfillment of the promise made by the Lord through Joseph Smith in T&C 93:7 (D&C 93:18-20).
Among other things, understanding the correct days for the events of that week allows for additional symbolic meaning in the accounts to become manifest.
For example, what we call Palm Sunday was therefore on 10 Nisan. That calendar day was the very day the Lord instructed the Israelites in Exod. 8:2 RE (traditional Exod. 12:3-6) that they should select the sacrificial lamb without blemish and take it into their home and keep it there with their family until they sacrificed it just before sunset on 14 Nisan, putting its blood on their doorposts. The lamb is then central to the Passover meal itself. So, in other words, on that Sunday, 10 Nisan, just as families were selecting their lamb and bringing each one into their homes, the Lamb of God entered into the gates of Jerusalem, the house of his people, joining them there and remaining there until his sacrifice on Thursday, 14 Nisan. He taught daily in the temple, the house of his Father, per Luke 12:5 RE and Luke 13:11 RE.
During the Second Temple period, Israelites did not slaughter their lambs at home but instead brought them to the temple in Jerusalem to be communally slaughtered that afternoon of Thursday 14 Nisan, their blood then being then being sprinkled on the temple altar by priests. It meant that as Christ hung on the cross north of the temple, large numbers of pilgrims were bringing their lambs to the temple courts, likely leading them right past those being crucified, where the temple priests facilitated the slaughter in an organized manner to accommodate the crowds.
Another Echo of the Lost Sabbath
Interestingly, reference to the two sabbaths in a row has been preserved in the Greek of Matthew’s account (Matt 28:1), though not properly translated into English in almost any edition of the Bible. (other than Young’s Literal Translation)
Here is the KJV of the verse with the mistranslated Greek word (click to enlarge):
Fixing the Unruly, Irregular, Unpredictable Hebrew Calendar
As the original Hebrew calendar was designed to work, it relied on observational astronomy to determine the start of lunar months. That is, they would watch for the first sliver of the moon after new moon to know when a month had begun. "According to the Mishnah and Tosefta, in the Maccabean, Herodian, and Mishnaic periods, new months were determined by the sighting of a new crescent, with two eyewitnesses required to testify to the Sanhedrin to having seen the new lunar crescent at sunset." (see Mishnah Rosh Hashanah 1:7)
It also needed to periodically have a leap month added to keep the calendar aligned with seasons. There is enough unknown about the original calendar revealed by the Lord that it’s not clear whether that realigning "leap month" originally relied on crop availability in the spring or something else.
The length of time from new moon to new moon (called a synodic month) varies in length from 29.3 to 29.8 days. And because observing it anciently depended on weather conditions, too, there could be various reasons for it shifting a day here or there. Or for a leap month happening one year versus another. It was not entirely predictable if you really wanted to make plans for a year or two out.
In our modern world it goes without saying that all this would, of course, be a problem. We like things, including calendars, to be neat & tidy. We like perfect predictability. We really must be able to forecast everything.
So, over the many years between 70 AD and 1178 AD, the observation-based Hebrew calendar was gradually replaced by a mathematically calculated one. It was fixed to have the kind of uniform, reliable, predictable mechanics that mankind craves and which soothsayers even today rely on. The history of each of the steps taken to fix it is fascinating & pretty well documented. The history there even notes that "at least two Jewish dates during post-Talmudic times (specifically in 506 and 776) are impossible under the rules of the modern calendar." In fact, the transition from the observational Hebrew calendar to its modern calculated calendar has been bumpy and not without many opinions on how it should be done. (including an attempt by the late John Pratt)
But here then is the irony of abandoning the observational Hebrew calendar: the modern Hebrew calendar never allows for the first day of Passover to occur on a Friday. Its gears and mechanics only ever allow it to be on a Sunday, Tuesday, Thursday, or Saturday. (see the details here)
That means among other things that when using the modern Hebrew calendar:
- It is impossible for the two sabbaths to have occurred as they did, seemingly erasing the possibility of the account witnessed in the New Testament and Covenant of Christ (or Book of Mormon) from ever having happened
- It is therefore also not possible to use this information to determine what year the resurrection happened
But prior to 70 AD when observational astronomy was used, the recorded events in our scriptures absolutely could have happened.